Mozilla LDAP SDK Programmer's Guide/Getting Server Information With LDAP C SDK
This section explains how to access and modify information about your LDAP server over the LDAP protocol.
Reading DSEs With LDAP C SDK
A DSA-specific entry, DSE, contains information specific to the server. In a directory tree, the root of the tree is the root DSE. The root DSE is not part of any naming context. For example, the root DSE is superior to dc=example,dc=com in the directory tree.
The root DSE is specified as part of LDAP v3. Note that LDAP v2 servers do not necessarily have a root DSE.
- The naming contexts of this server, such as dc=example,dc=com
- URLs of alternate servers to contact if this server is unavailable
- The versions of LDAP supported by this server, version 2 or version 3
- The LDAP v3 controls supported by the server
- The SASL mechanisms supported by the server
- The LDAP v3 extended operations supported by the server
The following list describes root DSE attributes and explains the meaning of their values.
- namingContexts: The naming contexts supported by this server, such dc=example,dc=com.
- altServer: LDAP URLs that identify other servers to contact if this server is unavailable.
- supportedExtension: The object identifiers (OIDs) of the LDAP v3 extended operations supported by this server.
If this attribute is not in the root DSE, the server does not support any extended operations. - supportedControl: The OIDs of the LDAP v3 controls supported by this server.
If this attribute is not in the root DSE, the server does not support any LDAP v3 controls. - supportedSASLMechanisms: The names of the SASL mechanisms supported by the server.
If this attribute is not in the root DSE, the server does not support any SASL mechanisms. - supportedLDAPVersion: The value of this attribute is the version of LDAP supported by this server, such as 2 or 3.
To Get the Root DSE
- Initialize an LDAP session by calling the ldap_init() or prldap_init() function.
- Turn off automatic referral handling by calling the ldap_set_option() function and setting the LDAP_OPT_REFERRALS option to LDAP_OPT_OFF.
- Search the directory with the following criteria:
- Set the search scope to a base search.
- Specify an empty string for the base DN.
- Use the search filter (objectclass=*).
- Check the results of the search.
If the server returns a result code, such as LDAP_OPERATIONS_ERROR, LDAP_PROTOCOL_ERROR, LDAP_REFERRAL, or LDAP_NO_SUCH_OBJECT, the LDAP server probably does not support LDAP v3.
The following example gets the root DSE for a server and prints the values of the root DSE attributes. The function assumes that you are passing in a valid connection handle, an LDAP structure, you have created by calling ldap_init() or prldap_init(). The function returns 0 if successful or 1 if an error occurred.
int printdse( LDAP *ld ) { int rc, i; char *matched_msg = NULL, *error_msg = NULL; LDAPMessage *result, *e; BerElement *ber; char *a; char **vals; char *attrs[3]; /* Verify that the connection handle is valid. */ if ( ld == NULL ) { fprintf( stderr, "Invalid connection handle.\n" ); return( 1 ); } /* Set automatic referral processing off. */ if ( ldap_set_option( ld, LDAP_OPT_REFERRALS, LDAP_OPT_OFF ) != 0 ) { rc = ldap_get_lderrno( ld, NULL, NULL ); fprintf( stderr, "ldap_set_option: %s\n", ldap_err2string( rc ) ); return( 1 ); } /* Search for the root DSE. */ attrs[0] = "supportedControl"; attrs[1] = "supportedExtension"; attrs[2] = NULL; rc = ldap_search_ext_s( ld, "", LDAP_SCOPE_BASE, "(objectclass=*)", attrs, 0, NULL, NULL, NULL, 0, result ); /* Check the search results. */ switch( rc ) { /* If successful, the root DSE was found. */ case LDAP_SUCCESS: break; /* If the root DSE was not found, the server does not comply with the LDAPv3 protocol. */ case LDAP_PARTIAL_RESULTS: case LDAP_NO_SUCH_OBJECT: case LDAP_OPERATIONS_ERROR: case LDAP_PROTOCOL_ERROR: printf( "LDAP server returned result code %d (%s).\n" "This server does not support the LDAPv3 protocol.\n", rc, ldap_err2string( rc ) ); return( 1 ); /* If any other value is returned, an error must have occurred. */ default: fprintf( stderr, "ldap_search_ext_s: %s\n", ldap_err2string( rc ) ); return( 1 ); } /* Since only one entry should have matched, get that entry. */ e = ldap_first_entry( ld, result ); if ( e == NULL ) { fprintf( stderr, "ldap_search_ext_s: Unable to get root DSE.\n"); ldap_memfree( result ); return( 1 ); } /* Iterate through each attribute in the entry. */ for ( a = ldap_first_attribute( ld, e, ber ); a != NULL; a = ldap_next_attribute( ld, e, ber ) ) { /* Print each value of the attribute. */ if ((vals = ldap_get_values( ld, e, a)) != NULL ) { for ( i = 0; vals[i] != NULL; i++ ) { printf( "%s: %s\n", a, vals[i] ); } /* Free memory allocated by ldap_get_values(). */ ldap_value_free( vals ); } /* Free memory allocated by ldap_first_attribute(). */ ldap_memfree( a ); } /* Free memory allocated by ldap_first_attribute(). */ if ( ber != NULL ) { ber_free( ber, 0 ); } printf( "\n" ); /* Free memory allocated by ldap_search_ext_s(). */ ldap_msgfree( result ); ldap_unbind( ld ); return( 0 ); }
Determining LDAP v3 Support With LDAP C SDK
You can determine what version an LDAP server supports by getting the supportedLDAPVersion attribute from the root DSE. This attribute could contain the value 2 or 3.
You do not need to authenticate or bind before searching the directory. Unlike LDAP v2, LDAP v3 states that clients do not need to bind to the server before performing LDAP operations.
The following example connects to an LDAP server. The example code then determines whether the server supports LDAP v3.
/* Function for determining if the LDAP server supports LDAPv3. This function returns 1 if the server supports LDAPv3 or 0 if the server does not support LDAPv3. */ int check_version( char *hostname, int portnum ) { LDAP *ld; int i, rc, v3supported = 0; LDAPMessage *result, *e; BerElement *ber; LDAPControl **serverctrls = NULL, **clntctrls = NULL; char *a, *dn; char **vals; char *attrs[2]; char *filter = "(objectClass=*)"; /* Check arguments */ if ( !hostname || !hostname[0] || !portnum ) { printf( "Error: hostname or port number not specified\n" ); return( -1 ); } /* Get a handle to an LDAP connection. Use prldap_init() for IPv6. */ if ( (ld = ldap_init( hostname, portnum )) == NULL ) { perror( "ldap_init" ); return( -1 ); } /* Set automatic referral processing off. */ if ( ldap_set_option(ld, LDAP_OPT_REFERRALS, LDAP_OPT_OFF) != LDAP_SUCCESS) { ldap_perror( ld, "ldap_set_option" ); return( -1 ); } /* Search for the root DSE and get the supportedLDAPVersion attribute. */ attrs[0] = "supportedLDAPVersion"; attrs[1] = NULL; rc = ldap_search_ext_s( ld, "", LDAP_SCOPE_BASE, filter, attrs, 0, serverctrls, clntctrls, NULL, 0, result ); /* Check the search results. */ switch( rc ) { /* If successful, the root DSE was found. */ case LDAP_SUCCESS: break; /* If the root DSE was not found, the server does not comply with the LDAPv3 protocol. */ case LDAP_PARTIAL_RESULTS: case LDAP_NO_SUCH_OBJECT: case LDAP_OPERATIONS_ERROR: case LDAP_PROTOCOL_ERROR: ldap_perror( ld, "ldap_search_ext_s" ); return( 0 ); break; /* If an different result code is returned, an error may have occurred (for example, the server may be down. */ default: ldap_perror( ld, "ldap_search_ext_s" ); return( -1 ); break; } /* Get the values of the supportedLDAPVersion attribute in the entry. */ if (( e = ldap_first_entry( ld, result )) != NULL ( a = ldap_first_attribute( ld, e, ber )) != NULL (vals = ldap_get_values( ld, e, a)) != NULL ) { for ( i = 0; vals[i] != NULL; i++ ) { if ( !strcmp( "3", vals[i] ) ) { v3supported = 1; break; } } /* Free any memory allocated. */ ldap_value_free( vals ); ldap_memfree( a ); if ( ber != NULL ) { ber_free( ber, 0 ); } } /* Free memory allocated by ldap_search_ext_s(). */ ldap_msgfree( result ); /* Free the ld structure. */ ldap_unbind_s( ld ); /* Return a value indicating whether or not LDAPv3 is supported. */ return( v3supported ); } ...
Getting Schema Information With LDAP C SDK
In LDAP v3, an entry can specify the schema that defines the object classes, attributes, and matching rules used by the directory. This entry is called the subschema entry. To find the DN of the subschema entry, get the subschemaSubentry operational attribute from the root DSE or any entry.
- objectClasses specifies the object class definitions in the schema. Each value of this attribute is an object class that is known to the server.
- attributeTypes specifies the attribute type definitions in the schema. Each value of this attribute is an attribute type that is known to the server.
- matchingRules specifies the matching rule definitions in the schema. Each value of this attribute is a matching rule that is known to the server.
- matchingRuleUse specifies the use of a matching rule in the schema. This rule specifies the attributes that can be used with this extensible matching rule. Each value of this attribute is a matching rule use description.
For information about the format of the attribute values, see RFC 4517, Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (v3): Attribute Syntax Definitions.